Cape May Wave, 22 November 1888 IIIF issue link — Page 1

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VOLUME IXXtT. ^

CAPE MAY CITY, NEW JERSEY. THUBSDAY, EOVEMEER 32, 188&

ffHOLE NDMBEK 1783. .i_. V- u nrrnoiiB 1kd1wopdfish. Tributes to Woman. I OCTOPUS AND SWOROritoM.

mm . CAP* MAY CITY, N. J; ■ ' M Mmrr.HAMD.amm. tt 00 • Tor Bt4oly la Aivuoe. WxtMUma fait. 'JtAMOIQ A black, attobn e y 8-at-la w , UAMDHH, h. J, tm-t )b j. r. lkamnra * son, ointists 'axes h. *. hlldeeth, attoknny-at-law amp aunm. ^ A/IMB, M. k biu dent physician, / , aou.1 uaoa. ». j. - 8pickb leaking, ttobney-at-law bolicitob-in-chanckby, >khningtcar t. bildrbth, attobney - at - law amd solicitor in chancery , Mtamr nr.. cumn. k. j. n«* o mm " "»» ma own brass aistib and glai1eb, OinMAYQTT, k.J. ^ o.oilb, house, sign and fresco painter, OAlfllT out, m. j. [pkbogathb uif1ue, ggjgKTOSSSS toutb or rg^Powm or oat. y abe & elubkdge, undkbtakebs. HREKK!"""* "SSL-st AXES T. BAILEY, ItiHtlutMw, ittiiEsmMuim 8SIS!SBMBSA"ASK™ I- »■ fMMaog. thorn. »btnut,«ir. .UMBER YARD Mwlhn|m Landing. -UilpWNG ICMBER, CUTYHACrOBS ud BUILDBB8 LfrtKKKLLKNQEBS. ni4mi am sw*. Pf IMf 3*;- " - mmmmmk.wu1, >. i i S

L ' ?Unos ami Organs. ' ~ BLASIUS & SONS, • Cor, Iran id Hut aid 1119 (Mint Strwts, PHILADELPHIA. "Mititl Orchestral Oipns . WORLD FAMOUS . Steinway & Sohmer, BLASIUS & SONS AND : PEASE PIANOS. The Largest and Best Stock of PIANOS and ORGANS „ in America by the World's Best Makers. 500 new Pianos n and Organs at the Lowest Prices, CASH OR ON TIME, '■STEMS MIS "S' Jmultarr, fcirpftt, Ctrl r 927 ' MARKET JSSSk THE WAVE'S READERS ' Are cordially invited, when in the city, to visit No. 927 Market street. They may need Furniture some day and it will do them good to drop in on us and learn for themselves what astonishing bargains are offered here in ail kinds of ' ■ FURNITUNE, Special inducements are offered to seaside , resort buyers who purchase extensively. We make our own Furniture, and sell at Retail cheaper than many dealers can buy at wholesale. ; CHASrWIINMANN & COMAKERS OF FINE FURNITURE. 927 •uocessori to Weber A iWelnmann. MARKET STREET, ' PHILADELPHIA. : FURNITURE For Hotels, Cottages & Boarding Houses. We propose to give our customers the advantage of buying direct and thus avail themselves of the opportunity of saving all 1 discounts allowed the middlemen. A very large assortment of Furniture and Bedding from which to select Ifwill pay you to call and see us. Estimates cheerfully furnished. ALEXJ. H. MACKIE, r (8uccassor to Mack la & Hilton.) 1 t9 North Second Street, PHILADELPHIA. 1 WATCHES, CLOCKS, Jewelry, Diamonds, and Silverware - AT WHOLESALE PRICES. T. O. HAYDOCK, PRACTICAL WATCHMAKER, No. 12 North Second Street. Philadelphia. ; littlinl Stirling | run. * WASHINOTON HOTEL, L ^ tevarrth and Chestnut its, Philadelphia. JERSEY HOTEL, ' ' '

j wa8 IT A DBEAM ? of Felloe, on the Owcr River, It noted for its excellent here a-il boos oro> looked by the enterprising ■itimns, but n u 111 red In nr. q ious branches of industry, fuck u Boer, j), log ud paper mills. knife factorleAud, - •i Ihc upper cad of the lown, memmolh woolen mill, employing eome six or eeven hundred bends, ud manufacturing the beet end finest of, roods, Including suitings tint any man might be proud 1 the early hour of bait-past sis or there- \ about, j ou might meet, coming from ell j directions, Use factory girls hurrying to tin tr work, for they keep strict account ■t that rut Institution. Soon the pooderoua iron gates swung shut, and the luckless one who la out hiual etey out. enlly not all weary, for some ere laugh, ing and talking, while others speed on, alone ud in silence, u if their task was a distasteful one ud they would fly from even thoee who share their toll. often you could not fell to note a man of about sixty-Are years who Invariably apcrowd. At the first thought you would decide that he is in same way connected i with the mill t then you discover that his course la always In u opposite direction,— when they are coming be is going; , ud again they meet him him traveling , In the oppoeltf direction. s he Is a man of large proportions, with , broad ahouldree ud a muscular frame. . >s His face Is smooth-ahaven, with maulve , r chin, ud stubbornness ud determina- " tlon written to every feature. he it not , pertlt nlarly prepoeteetlng In appearance, , end yet there la that about him that , n would lead a mu to trust him. Be al- , ways leads by the chain a ferocious bulldog. and carries with him a good-sired ( tin pall. - Do yon know him now ? You were , right in the first place ; he belongs to the mill. Such u stlsbli ihment mult have , man. " The right mu in the right | place," you say at once. f 5 Well, yer, perhaps ; ud yet it Is but , a few years ago that Sandy McPhail make a slip that nearly resulted In his , losing his place, bis chancier, end all j " How did It happen > " • Til tell you. 1o begin way back at , the beginning, he had beer watchman at , the factory for upward of thirty years, , —ever since he came from Scotlond, , when quite a young man. Day In, day , ud f1 rlhur'r d t m^wtuf 01 b 'had 1 worn out several dogs mcutlmc, ud uy number of tin palls, but he himself , ■till remained strong and unyielding to , the Sight of lime. Be uad married, and by steady, per- , ■t. tent effort had bought ud paid for a ooay borne with a nice little garden ad- , bo had brought up and educated two j dlnary good fellowe, much like their fsther. and worked In the mill; but the , at aa early ege her parents had toes her J happily married to a wealthy young mil. , _ brought borne a glowing aooount of all of Study's life was some time to ice his J - Idol In her own home. You may not realise U, reader, -may , to travel. Doe may manage nicely with ' the Htlle every- day wants ; but when en - extra cum Is demanded, ell In a lump, . that Is uother matter. TUa waa not aD, -Sandy wae proud. Too would never have imagined it, but . It la a faot, ncverthelcas. He oonld , never disgrace hie daughter. In her fine , house, with her carriage and servants and pretty drviss, In hie rough -andready suit that be wore to the mill; ud, J „ threadbare by the past service of twenty' ' U ^Tof mde"rl^ 1 jf the fulfilment of his heart's desire then ' the year Wore. " One day it became almost unbearable. Ills daughter sent him a obaok to defray ' hie traveling expenses, and urged htm to came at dace, tor she and .her hnaband were about to go abroad to be absent s nuesber of years. Poor old mil Ha oould not become . u object of charity by letting his dughtor know the simple slate of the caee ; be ecrald not grieve km by refusing to ] bie of all was the thought of going, if he ' went, aa he would bo obliged to go. Pbor old mu I I say again. As he paced the Boor of the mill that night his 1 ~ It seemed so unjust for a mu who bad worked so hard all his lift, who had 1 j been so faithful, so trustworthy, to be ' dented this one greet pleasure of a life- ' time for so Uulc e thing as e suit of \ man by nature, bat he clenched his fists ' end gritted hie teeth as he paseed 1 through the rooms where the piles upon ' pUra of writings reached the celling. It < wee like dying of thirst in the midst of . suddenly J— the thought 'came to htm, ' suppoaeoneofthamptaceawae gooe In 1 the morning, what dlfBerenea would it 1 make to uy onef Probably among eo 1 many U would never ha mini I, sad It ' It ware, weald liar verba euspectpd of ' having eught to d» »»'«! * dteappear- ' sdcei His way would be dear Uan He ' oould go to hk daughter's, and she need 1 have no reason to bo ashamed of him. It was the oalg w»y. Bis resolution I ~ was taken. He listened carefully, and then onnaad on tiptoe to one of the piles ' _ of goods ; be gjaooed cautiously around him. then quickly seined upon a piece halt way down to the pOe add puDed U out- With a crash the top of She pile toppled over. Sudy alerted a. If a hand wae upon his ehopldrr, ud Usy »'■ &"repl«oed S - eMh fallen upon Ote ttoor, and stole ] sofOyecrcae the room with the piece be . ' bad eeiocted In his aims. ' TW dog followed at Ha beds; he a. pumad hhn tmck, opcand the door ud , l, ■

the great hall, and finally the heavy door creaked on Its hinges and bo flood ff The dog1 howled dismally where he j i had left him. He heeltateed for e mo- ; • meat,— It wae the «a<y way. He grasped , ' the clotli tightly and almost ran acrom ' the yard to u outhouse used for Moring old machinery. There he hid Use doth. ii once more in the room hr had left The dog was sulky, end retreated to s the farther corner of the room. Bandy " wondered If the beam knew and nndrr1 stood what he had been doing. Perhaps everyone, If they knew, would draw • .way from him Ilk. Ibet.-bls dughicr ^ would not give him a kiss. He Mart ed i bearable. But who would ever know 1 ii It waa hie right. If they had dealt fairly 1 with him, had given him the salary they ^ ought, he need never have committed ' * He eaw hla way plainly enough now. ' y ears before, when a boy In Scotland. • he had played with uother boy, a ' neighbor adjoining Dulel Prattle by 1 nunc. They had come to this country together, and the long years that had in- ' strengthen the friendship of "lug 8 bond of a common country. 1 Dulel wu e tailor by trade, but as | his years Increased, ho bad left the vll- • ducc found a ready market, and he took ■ fitting or meet stylish garment ever ' made for mortal mu. Occasionally, of a Buoday afternoon, 1 Sudy would walk out and view bis ' friend's garden, ud taste the grapes and ' remark the sire of the melons ud the ' soft flush on the checks of tbi' Juicy ' peaches. Dulel, at times, still took in ' odd Jobs at tailoring. His fingers had not forgotten their cunning in Ibis direc1 This was the course of Sandy's teas 1 oning. He wonld take the cloth to him. ' it would not be missed ; If it 1 were, this would be the least likely ^ plare to look for It. Any way. It was ' The following Sunday, Sudy told his ' wife he would walk out to ice Dulel ; 1 would lake a basket to bring home the pear* his friend bed promised him. night before he had brought home the cloth ud hidden It ; he carried It ' with htm In the covered basket. He ' found Dulel in his garden, bending [ temg rate^ by' InecL he not quite rid himself of. The two walked leisurely up the garden path, 1 while Bandy related bis Philadelphia plus ud the object of his visit. Dm- ' rugged face shone with the picas- ' ore he felt in hie friend's happiness. He ' examined the cloth, pronounced It a 1 "right fine bit o' goods," ud agreed to ' good time. That night jn bis watch Sudy won- " dcred what honest old Du would think ' of htm, could he know how that doth came iuto his possession. He would ' then. He begu lo feel quite secure to ' his position i nothing as yet had hip1 pened to disturb him. 1 Bdt the storm broke! It was several 1 days after. As he took bis way toward 1 the mill at night, ho met one rf the bands, a girl about his own daughter's age who had boon In school with her, 1 "o, Mr. MePhaU," she said, "such a 1 time as we've had to-day ! Do you ' a piece of cloth to missing, one of the very beetf Twaa u odd piece, the only one left of the kind, and young Mr. ' u for himself, ud when he came to get ' It, It was gone. They had marked the ' pile It waa In so aa to find It nally, ud all the rest to there but that one .piece. i Queer, isn't?" > Sandy fell himself growing dlxxy. He tried to say something, but his lips refused to open. Tbe gitl went on i "i think, end the girls Ihlnk, be mnsl have ' taken It out ud put It somewhere else end forgotten It. That's tbe most reasonable Idea, don't you think so f " Sudy managed to articulate "Yea," and tbe girl said "Good -night," and hur- ' fled on. It was missed i It was discovered : He felt as he must fly somewhere, uy. where far enough sway so they oould ■ not find him. After the first shock, j however, he begu to (recover himself. on to the mill, partially reassured, but ' trembling with terror. No one wu , there ; end ell wu u usual; there wu i Daniel PeeUlc's garden had ki pt him , busy he had not yet begun on Bandy's suit. Each night, when he finished hto work. uw untouched cloth would cause i him a twinge of eonecleaee, and he would vow to go to work on it in the , morning; but when morning came, per- \ would demand hto attention, ud so the . days went on. . At lest, Boeder, became to town with a load of garden vegetables. He had , disposed o I them, ud M u wu getting to ihc feU sod chilly, stopped e moj ston to ZLm his cold "flngets^'th^ wu no exception to the average grocery I nod a crowd of mm ami boys were t lounging about the fire. They had been ' but u he Joined thou a .Hence fell up. , the group and tlicy eyed him curioue- ' of the notorious us , got ip, spoke: "Ah, Prattle, nice scrape i ti)gt blind of retire, McPhail, has gu| | let. "Yes I haven't you beard r Stole cloth si the mill. The old man's going to spring a trap on Mm. He's got the wUnetara. One of the hands wu prowldp M, saw hto put It to the place where they keep thr»T — ' -ff machinery. He 1 tooths baas wbra be heard the ctoth wu gene, and they weal these and ' but ttsy couldn't find It. The M mu 'mean, lo keep shady ud «ct ; a watch on Sandy sad try aad catch 1 hto whea he comes out with the cloth." ; •noi"-"o,4if "f-

y must be eome awful mistake. He went d to eee Mr. Stover, the manager at the j mlfi. Mr. Stuver ioellnod to be reticent a , upo^iherobjoct ; but toaily-persuadod d j be corrolxnBted the story. He ended is by telhng blm that be should rely upon g hb, honor not In toy w»y to Intimate s i, warning to Sudy. He should not welt d forever, but on the strength of thto wit- . :o row. y Dulel grew pale. Hto thoughts were r- with 8udy's wife sad the daughter, the : m little girl Hint he remembered, wbo used tr to ask him for po let when her father i tr wonld bring her with him to see the gar- ' d den. Daniel had no children of hto own, I heart for this little one. Perhaps Sudy y deserved it all. but for tbe uke of his ' h P°" For heaven's sake, Mr. Bluver.don'l it arrest him ot hto house ; It would kill hto wife ! " r. " Well. I'm sorry enough for her. but i I, the Innocent must always suffer with the guilty. Still. 11 it would make It any ; 7 row night." » Might 1 come too. air? Perhaps 1 0 could brace Mm up a bit. He's u old ! g mu, sir, and we've always been friends, i e He may deserve it all. but it will come t l" "gne should have thought of that, i e enough for blm myself, but I'm not tbe . k only jwrty Interested.^ ^1 eould not I ,t It wu with a beery heart tlfltl Daniel : 1 drove home thai night. He waa not a quick-witted mu, not u ingenious a mind to save hto old Weed, the rrapon- i e After e sleepless night be laid out a plan. I y It Involved great rlak lo himself, aud if " d Young Mr Stuver was called "young" 1 thon himself, not from any particular ' knowing his Interest in grapes, had , brought Uiru to to lb. dining room to 1 g s glim pre of piles of linen ud a wardc Daniel . you will oec. had decided ..o | U a bold venture.— lo uke this cloth and ( d put It to Mr. Stuvcr's own house. Mr. , s with him, then and there, ud had for ' i- gotten it? This would not prevent I- Sandy's arrest. In all probability, bur ( e would be found afterward, -he would D Never did a starving beggar ask at the j I- Daniel Inquired early in the mining al [ It young Mr. Stuver'a door If they were f b wanting uy vegetoblca. Her mtotress _ J Truly "fortune favors tho brave." Ilut ] 0 would the gin ever go? Mrs. Stuver ( s would come and then hto opportunily , , would be lost. Hto eyra were glued lo , a He had a big basket of celery on his ( a arm,— they usually took that at all big , if houses,— ud the cloth was to the hot- ( e torn of tne basket. , The girl chattered on. Presently , 1 some one called from the kitchen, nc ( e be many minutes. j d Hto only chance! He hsd the cloth out ( u of the basket uil had crossed the room ( »nd openod that door to less time than , e it takes to tell it. Ho dropped the cloth , i- on a shelf; dosed the door, and had , I only reached the centre of the dining- , e room when Mrs Stuver entered tbe j i. "Yon were going," she said. "1 am j sorry to have kept you waiting, but am , " glad to see you. We want tome cel. ( ■- ery," ud so on, through Bandy's list of , vegetables, ud he looked at her tuspi ( ! clously, wondering If she inspected uy- , '- thing, or If she could hear his heart , i brat. | :, He came down the steps with a great t Thuk God, who had aeon fit to grant t him aucoossl » Some days had elapsed since Sandy bad learned that hto crime was disco acred. He had almost fallen back into hto a old, aasnred self. Not a straw had ' shown him which way tbe wind blew. • On this eventful night, he was serene- • ly nneondous of the sword so long held 0 over hto brad and about to fall. He e paced up ud dewn the half empty - rooms, whoso bare floors echoed back e late In the evening, -ten o'clock at least. Did he hear something? He listened for 1 the door creaked and steps were aeeendi- came. Hto heart smote him, bis kneel r nook, and ne stood facing the door, » breathless with horror. In a moment f hto suspenae was ended ud^tos fe»rs;^bit entered. >- If three men liad felt uy doubt as to i i- Sandy's guilt. It wonld have boon dispelled by hto appearance. : s He suk down to a heap upon the e floor, hto (ace ghastly In the dim light, i i Ms eyra upon the floor, and trembling in every Hnib. i Daniel approached him. "Cheer up, e old boy; IPs all a mistake; you'll have io t s go with him now. but wchl find some • way to ekaf you « Th» constable ap. r » ^sandy grasped hto friend convulsively t " by the ccat-aleeve. ' Van will break it • louses. o, my God! My Oodl Fool « 5 that Irani" d Daniel whispered "Yes." Hto con- • • science had reproached Mm. Ha was a ' 1 Just man. He had left Uke a criminal K himself at aiding this mu to eacape hto I K lawful punishment. Ilut be gloried to ' It Ma shame Ho had suffered enough. I

I He was glad, thankful, that eould t Tbe constable was helping him up, I and he etQl clung helplessly to Daniel , They had left the door open when - i A swift step was beard on tho slain. ! i Young Mr, Stuver rushed tat > the room ; piece ot cloth. They Ml tmew It must . he fAe, piece of cloth before he wis able 1 s He gasped: It's wretched blunder; all I ! my own confounded carelessness, father! I Let the man alone!" sharply to the con- ' r stable. "I must liave token the cloth 1 - that night we talked of it, father. , 1 remember 1 wore this onr coat that i same oighl and have t had it on since. 1 r I went In to get it out to-night and there , down as fast as 1 could with 1L 1 beg your pardon a thousud times over, Mr. 1 I McPhail. Tm sure I don't know how I old and trusted employee on such slight 1 : Old Mr Stuver cime forward, while 1 this unfortunate occurrence^ Mr. Mcl pidlty." darting u ugry glance al bis 1 : shit* to any way uf render our^ajwlogloi | • the more slnccrs. and to keep an old I sod valued assistant in our employ, we : shall gladly double it." jt , i I floor udatlll clinging t.Ttooid friend's 1 ltanlrl answered for Mm ' The shock ' , I mi, safely answer on his part that he 1 give him a vacation in which to go < " "And ue< go.' continued Daoiel. 1 Kuus Hx.isxrr. Animals get rid of their parasites by I using dust. mud. clay. etc. Those out. 1 that species of grass known is dog'. I when 111. seek out certain herbs. An auiuisl suffering from chronic ilieu- ' I.slrcilic cut the sulennic of llie ant. and their mouths. II a rliimpaor.ee Is on it It co.npl.te. tto- amputation by [ means of its teeth. A dog on being , severs! day. in running water. Vbln , animal eventually recovered. A terrier , 1 counter, avoiding light and heat, al- | lire. It adopted a general treatment, , and abstinence from food. The surface of the paw, which "ft ap. J pHcd to the woumled eye.^agalo picking , tbwlvea'hT 1 ihc'coetlnued application , of Sfld wator. which M. Dclaunay con. , 1 farced to admit that hygiene sod them- ' the interest of psychology, he studied < observers of animals, their die- 1 ud the methods adopted by them, < Depot, 'for stoUoti. I i Posted, for Informed. . Stopping, for stoytog. < Like I do, for as I do. i Feol badly, for feci bad. . First rate, as an adverb. t Healthy, for wholesome ( Try ud do. for try to do. i These kind, for this kind. ■ Funnj, for odd or unusual. \ Guess, for suppose or think. . Jus'as soon, for Just as lief. < Right away, for immediately. c Between seven, for among severe c Not as good as, for not so good as. t Some ten days, for about ten days. 9 The matter of. for the matter with. a Not as I know, for not that I know. t Somebody o!ae"r, far somebody's else. Kind of , to Indicate a moderate do grere ' Storms, for It rains or snows modcr- I Above, for foregoing, more than, or 1 beyond. i Try u experiment, for make an ex- I perimcnt. ' , ' More thu you think tor, for more i ml verb. a. g,, "She don't skate well." i <RwI aioe mT ! real good, for really or very good. i xltltely. IUuatratlore- We taste a dish i , which ustos of pepper. t Boom or any, In aa adverbial sense, e. * i "i- have studio ! «™ for some- | what, "i have not .luii dan," {of t 1 ;

Glimpses of a Terrific ConUtt' i Detnoi P.-ee Press Prof. f. Nichols Crouch, the com- , , of tna worid-famed "Kathleen Ua- , vourneen." writes as follows from Balli- , more, Md., under date ot October 27th : . "With s strong head wlod, an unus1 •o^tra '7*"*', ' ""''Big fish ! Weather side. '• ^ 1 , our attention was ealle^To it by the , We saw s gigantic black arm, , . from the sea, instantly followed by a , , into the air some lire feet high, curving ' I a bow as It descended heart ud . ; seen and fully developed, was some ' , circumference it was not less tbu ; suit continuing. II niluraily drifted into ! I tbe stesmci's wske, ud from lime to bvlow Its crab like antagonist . but ( to the anrface, the mammoth | - arms of Uie octopus grappled distance iwordfitb to spring high to tbe air, ]u. 1 dleiously diving al some distance sway. ( , re" ri^n^toe Old* s^' "TrarelJ^el | lieorg a cotton pickers are paid forty 1 crntoa day. ^ ^ , Cedar logger# on the Florida gulf i from fflO to *20 per month. Mica miners ami "trimmers" In North Girls employed to strip tobacco to Key ' factories*! Mac4 U» .-am as high as ('J per week. I .Those who work on South Carolina rice plantation, tailor all Ihe year for in , ' The men who do the "chipping'' on , Georgia inrpenlioe farms receive »1 a .lay . "dippers" gel 35 cents more. Florida orange growers are offering *2 per d»y for hu.ls to pick ud pack , Farm hands are eo very scarce Id some , children have been compelled to | U) the fields to assist the farme.s in '"ti.i more thu 800 hands to the cm. 1 ploy of the Disston. Drainage Company , on their big dredges to the Everglades, and engaged deepening >0 streams in- , 1 Icracctlng Lake Okeechobee, are paid $30 means, to this case*! fed upon ' prepared In slvgaat stylo. schoolhouso bulldcd with hands, with 1 ; possibly gpare^H to tire norrasljio- I , mental side through knowledge pro- 1 the Inculcation of politeness, clcullnewh ' daily lessons as do mjt trench on the do- ' main of dogmatic thoology. The spirit- 1 ual side of education, by far the most vital element of growth, to left to tta ' aud the church. But even on the 1 SSSSSTE physician "would 1 think of admintotertog powerful medicines to a child without first learning of , predispositions.^ But children are left ] guisatlons. Ily the side of Johnny, j full of big sums, which he boasts he can , crying over the hapless Job. The moth- ' tells little Nell that tho odght to do the sums if Johnny can, yet at tho table , she forbids Nellie to touch the beefsteak . sayiog that Johnny can digest such , tough diet, bnt It would make her slok. " Tho Madonna at the Tub," 1 Of whom Miss i>help« writes, wast con- f utac specimen of health and strength. ' She donbtless heeded" the warnings of c predecessors, and underwood ud 1 appreciated the matchless qualities of 1 Pierce's Favorite Prescription, ' which relieves and cures so many ail 1 menu peculiar to the sex. As a power- . ful, invigorating tonic, it Imparts strength to the whole system, and to tho 1 womb and lu appendages, in particular. | ^asifissws ; „:£riri'r£h.s,r2.^ i r -j. w-. , r-v v,„. ,

Confucius— Woman to the masterpiece. Herder— Womu to Ihe crown of craeVoltalre — Women leach us repoae, Leasing— Nature mrant to make woJohn Qutocy Adams— All that i am, Ruskto— Shakesjicarc has no heroes —ho "has only heroines ' Whittler— If woman lost na Eden, r such as she alone restore it. 1 Gladstone— Womu to the most perfect when the most womanly. E. S. Barrett — Womu to last at the ' cross ud earliest at the grave. 1 mu to a lady to right of her sex. j Baadl— A handsomo womutoajewri; Lxmarline — There to a womu at the 1 beginning of all great things. Rochfoucauld— A fashionable womu ' to always In love with herself. [ Cowley— What to a womu? Oely ' one of nature's agrccablo blunders. E Rlchtcr— No mu can either live piously or die righteous without a wife. 1 pent through s professional Jealousy. [ N. P. Willis— The sweetest thing to 1 life to the unclouded welcome of a wife. Francis I - A womu changes oft ; who ' her is the softest of the soft. J Shakespeare— There was never a fair ' Heine— Handsome women without reVoltaire— All the reasonings of men Leopold Sehcfer— But one thing on J earth to better than s wife— that to the 1 '.Cjagantes Between a woman's "yes" ud"no" I would not venture to stick a Lulher- Earth has nothing more tenabode of pity. 1 thor to the world teaches such beauty Mlchelet - Woman to the Bundiy of the Bailor hto Ufa"" ^ for love, and It is impossible to turn her from seeking it. A bad fit Epileptic. The age ol humor -Badinage. Food for reflection-Brain food. Ao attractive paper- Fly paper. 1 A bad fit— A fit of despondency. A bad spell of weather Whether. Down In Ihc mouth—' The tongue. A large snowdrop— An avalanche. The first letter -carrier- The alphabet In the human race the butcher holds Strang,- to say, a cross road to often The best way to put down rents to to About tbe first thing lost at tea is the ; sight of land. With defaulters It to fiy-llme al uy 1 a conveyuce. That bread riot in France was particlpsfiodto by tho toriara. ^ ^ The wisest feUowa. ws think, art those wbo agree with us. An old womu who paints— Age hold- ' tog up a flag of truce to lime. If a doctor orders, has not tho patient 1 right to growl f sure to ten it Ibe first chance he gets. When poverty to abolished what a hard time every one will have doing hto , own work. It to a scientific fact that over-tod ul- ; to XXXXXX makes a mu feel like sixty. The mu who docs everything "on his , own book" to likely to be caught one of i testimony is needed^ the erank appears to be a prasu who . mow. down the mental weeds to a whins- . viekle way. ; Of ceurra one Idea of The bakers' aa- , ion to to prevent nay unnecessary h*f- , Thb seems strange. a petrified mu his bran foatid in , Wisconsin. ii to probably the body of I the mu who fell "stone dead." People soon And out by experleaoe tough ud be merry to oonrtSy 'required of them. The busy, bustling 1 mass of humanity cannot stop to weep 1 with the sorrowing one, but pasna gnlly bent on its own pursuit of plessnre or gain. That to taking the character of mankind as s whole ; but there are few ' unfortunate it not to possess one bean which tmUes or weepa with ' but failure ud grief affect the upon tho gale. Even when n really no one's sorrow, but only tbe ud tho world goes on to Its old careless i wsy. Private griefs must bo bapt tor private life. Tho world knows ud less for tho Joys and wora of any " one mortal, though the Joys t^ bring out from the mad, merry world, aorao ' new lace coatee to fill hto place, and Ibe sorrowing one to forgone* The world ■ ase-jTSs-ressa: • row ud trouble para a wsy with ttonn ittwaSKa-iss ssSSTsSs?1' . tlon, but If tram must be wept, werpTH